DISTRICT HEIGHTS, Md. (AP) — A bank that has been robbed so many times it bans customers from coming inside was held up again anyway on Friday.

Anyone using the Bank of America branch on Silver Hill Rd. has been forced to go to the drive-up or the ATM for the last few months after managers got fed up with the repeated heists.

But when one of the tellers went out for a break, a robber saw a window of opportunity.

"There were two tellers inside of this bank. One of the tellers left to run over to the drug store and as she was walking back, a suspect wearing dark clothing produced a gun and forced her inside the bank," Cpl. Diane Richardson of the Prince George's County police.

The suspect tried to lock both tellers in the vault, but could not.

No one was hurt, and there was no word on how much money the suspect made off with.

Police said just last week, a teller was about to leave when she saw a man outside with a gun. She was able to lock herself in and get help.

STONE MOUNTAIN, Ga. (AP) — A driver's education instructor was run over by one of her students and pinned beneath the car for 15 minutes, officials said.

Two cars driven by students collided on the DeKalb County Schools driver's education lot, then one of the students backed into Patricia Erwin, running her over.

She was hospitalized Friday in stable condition and underwent surgery for multiple broken bones.

Erwin, 64, who has taught driving for 20 years, was working with the students on a drill that included pulling forward and backing up at slow speeds, said Kal Kelliher, the district's driver's education coordinator.

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Selling gas at 19 cents per gallon brought in a lot of business for George Riley's gas station two weekends ago. If only Riley had planned it that way.

Riley is out $2,000 after a computer glitch Feb. 5 lowered the price of gas at his Phillips 66 station from $1.83 per gallon to just 19 cents.

The mistake was corrected the following morning when a television reporter called to ask about the cheap gas. But by then, Riley said, customers had pumped 1,200 gallons.

The inadvertent discount had been the rage of radio call-in shows. A truck driver called the gas station to warn that news of the bargain had been broadcast on CB radio.

A church offered to help Riley with the loss, which he declined, but he said no customers have come by to give him more money. He plans to take advantage of the publicity, offering gas at 66 cents a gallon for one unannounced hour a week, beginning next week.

"It's hard to blame people," he said. "Most people don't realize a small individual owns this business. They think they're getting the big oil company."

Last month in Nebraska, a misplaced decimal point put the price of a regular gallon of unleaded gasoline at 18 cents. The gas was supposed to cost $1.89.

GLEN AUBREY, N.Y. (AP) — An explicit six-foot-tall snow sculpture depicting male genitals in a yard on a rural road north of Binghamton had some drivers doing a double-take last week.

One neighbor, Bob Hodges, told a Binghamton radio station that the much larger-than-life icy display "was the talk of the town for a while."

Hodges said many people who saw it just chuckled.

But the artwork provoked a frosty reaction from one woman, who called the Broome County Sheriff's Department (search) to complain about what she described as an "offensive" snow sculpture.

A deputy who went to the home was told by a mother that the unconventional display was the work of her sons. While the mother said she wouldn't knock it down, she told the deputy she'd have her sons take care of it.

The sculpture was gone the next day.

Compiled by FOXNews.com's Paul Wagenseil.

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